Abraham of Augsburg
Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short description Abraham of Augsburg (died 21 November 1265) was a German proselyte to Judaism. He died a martyr's death.
Life
Abraham was born at Augsburg, and he later converted into Judaism at a foreign region.[1]
He adopted his new faith with such enthusiasm that, returning to Augsburg, he publicly assailed Christianity and attacked images of the saints, namely severing the heads of some crucifix figurines, and also smashing a religious portrait which had been engraved on stone. For all this he was sentenced to torture and death by burning.[1]
Reportedly, Abraham's rage ensued in a bitter confrontation between Jewish and Catholics of Sinzig, ensuing in a regional pogrom in which 61 other Jews were slain, together with Abraham.[2] The incident attracted considerable attention, and it forms the subject of elegies by Mordecai ben Hillel (who himself suffered martyrdom in 1298) and by the liturgical poet Moses ben Jacob. The rites of Selichot tell about Abraham.
References
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Bibliography of Jewish Encyclopedia
- Leopold Zunz, S.P. pp. 350, 364;
- S. Kohn, Mordecai ben Hillel, pp. 46–49 and appendix I;
- Perles, in Monatsschrift, 1873, pp. 513, 514;
- Salfeld, Martyrologium des Nürnberger Memorbuches, pp. 22, 149, 150;
- Pages with script errors
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- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia
- People from Augsburg
- 13th-century converts to Judaism
- 13th-century German Jews
- Converts to Judaism from Roman Catholicism
- 1265 deaths
- Jewish martyrs
- Year of birth unknown
- Date of birth missing